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Anas Sarwar Decided Last Minute to Call for Starmer's Resignation

Anas Sarwar revealed he decided on the morning of his press conference to call for Sir Keir Starmer's resignation, citing mistakes during Starmer's premiership and the controversy over Peter Mandelson's appointment.

·3 min read
PA Media Anas Sarwar standing next to Sir Keir Starmer at a Labour Party event. Sarwar is wearing a white shirt and red tie and has his hand on the shoulder of Starmer, who is wearing a white shirt, a blue jacket and black-rimmed glasses.

Sarwar's Last-Minute Decision to Call for Starmer's Resignation

Anas Sarwar revealed that he only made the decision to publicly call for Sir Keir Starmer to resign as prime minister on the morning of his press conference. The Scottish Labour leader urged the UK Labour leader to step down last month, citing "too many mistakes" during Starmer's premiership.

At the time, Starmer's judgement faced scrutiny over the appointment of Peter Mandelson as UK ambassador to the US, despite Mandelson's connections to convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.

Reflection and Motivation Behind the Call

Sarwar told the BBC's Scotcast podcast that he slept "very well" the night before his hastily arranged speech because he "hadn't made my mind up properly" until the following day.

"I thought about it a lot," he said. "In actual fact I hadn't properly made my mind up until the morning, having slept on it, woke up, thought about it.
"I just felt as if I had to be true to myself and be true with the public. That's when the press conference was set up."

As Sarwar began his speech six weeks ago, a number of senior Labour ministers quickly expressed their support for the prime minister on social media.

The Scottish Labour leader stated that although he had discussed the matter with some colleagues at the time, he had kept his personal views "largely to himself," insisting he was "not part of any coup or plot."

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Relationship with Starmer Post-Resignation Call

Since the resignation call, Sarwar says he has only spoken to the prime minister once by phone. Prior to this, he noted that few people in politics had as close a relationship with Starmer as he did.

"I think it's safe to say that saying what I said will have hurt him," he said.

He described their current relationship as "difficult, but still professional."

"I do genuinely like him as a human being," Sarwar added. "I do think he is a man of decency and integrity. I do think that he wants what's best for our country.
"But I'm the one who has got to face the electorate. I've got to tell them who I am."

Impact of Mandelson and Epstein Questions on Sarwar's Decision

Sarwar also explained to the podcast that questions from reporters about Peter Mandelson and Jeffrey Epstein had a "monumental bearing" on his decision to call for Starmer's resignation.

"I was calling out some of the most difficult situations that many families will ever face in their lives about what's happened at the Queen Elizabeth [University Hospital in Glasgow] and I'd left the parliament and walked out of the parliament chamber and you have the press pack outside for the doorstep and every single question I got was about Mandelson," he said.
"And it made me think for a number of days about what's happening and what the situation is. And did that have a monumental bearing on my view and what I said [in calling for Starmer to quit]? Absolutely it did."

Context of the Interview

Sarwar was speaking to Scotcast as part of a series of interviews with Scotland's party leaders ahead of May's Holyrood election. The interview will be available on from 17:00.

Interviews with Scottish Liberal Democrat Alex Cole-Hamilton, Reform UK's Malcolm Offord, Scottish Green co-leader Gillian Mackay, and the SNP's John Swinney are available on and BBC . An interview with Scottish Conservative Russell Findlay is due to be published on Thursday.

This article was sourced from bbc

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